Capuchin monkeys have been cracking nuts open with stone tools for 3,000 years

Capuchin monkeys have been cracking nuts open with stone tools for 3,000 years — with 450 generations of primates refining the techniques

Researchers dug up the first ever capuchin monkey archaeological site in Brazil

Carbon dating of charcoal bits allowed unearthed stone tools to be given ages

Small rocks were used until 2,500 years ago, when bigger stones tools appear

However, the monkeys switched back to smaller tools around 300 years ago

By Ian Randall For Mailonline

Published: 16:00 BST, 24 June 2019 | Updated: 16:22 BST, 24 June 2019

Capuchin monkeys have been using stone tools to crack open cashew nuts for around 3,000 years — or 450 generations — reveals a dig in Brazil.

Archaeologists found that the monkeys have changed the size of tools they used over time, switching from smaller rocks to larger ones and back again.

The changes in tool size could be because different groups of monkey use different tools — or because the larger rocks were used on different types of food.

Capuchin monkeys have been using stone tools to crack open cashew nuts for around 3,000 years — or 450 generations — reveals a dig in Brazil

University College London archaeologist Tomos Proffitt and colleagues excavated a site in Brazil’s Serra da Capivara National Park, where capuchin monkeys to this day use stones as tools to smash open cashew nuts.

Researchers studied the stone tools that they unearthed and used carbon-dating of fragments of charcoals found near each tool to determine their respective ages.

They found that capuchin monkeys have been cracking open nuts with rocks at this site for around 3,000 years — which is about 450 generations.

Capuchin monkeys have also changed their nut-cracking tactics with time, the researchers report.

When the monkeys began using stone tools at the site they used small and light rocks to help get at their food.

However the researchers found that the primates switched to using bigger and heavier stone tools between 2,500–3,000 years ago.

After this period, however, the capuchin monkeys reverted to using smaller tools again — a trend which has carried over into the present day.

Archaeologists found that the monkeys have changed the size of tools they used over time, switching from smaller rocks to larger ones and back again

Dr Proffitt and colleagues have put forward a number of theories that could explain the changes in tool use.

Firstly, different groups of the monkeys could have used different sizes stones.

Alternatively, it could be that cashews were less readily available at certain points in time, forcing the animals to use larger tools to process different types of food.

With the presentation of this study, capuchin monkeys now join humans and chimpanzees as the only animals with a known archaeological record.

They are not the only animals to use tools, however — with otters being known to use rocks to smash open crabs, sea urchins and clams.

The full findings of the study were published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.

University College London archaeologist Tomos Proffitt and colleagues excavated a site in Brazil’s Serra da Capivara National Park, where monkeys to this day use stones as tools to smash open cashew nuts

WHAT ARE CAPUCHIN MONKEYS?

Capuchin monkeys are New World monkeys that evolved around 6.2 million years ago.

They live in Central and South America, where they sleep in tree branches at night and spend their days foraging for food.

They typically live in groups of around 10–35 individuals.

An adult capuchin monkey can reach between 12–22 inches (30–56 cm) in length, with tails that are typically just as long as the body.

New research has shown that they have been using stone tools to smash open nuts for at least around 3,000 years.

Some capuchin monkeys have also been observed using stone tools to crack open crabs and shellfish.

As a result of their tool use, along with humans and chimpanzees, capuchin monkeys are the only animals with a known archaeological record.

They take their name from the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin, monks whose appearance — with their brown-robed bodies but light-coloured heads — they loosely resemble.

The most intelligent of New World monkeys, capuchins are easily trained. They have a history of being prized as exotic pets and for entertainment, having been used to accompany organ grinders and as greyhound jockeys.

The most famous capuchin monkey, however, may be Marcel — Ross’ white-headed monkey on the TV sitcom ‘Friends’.